The Medal of Saint Benedict

Medals, crosses, rosaries, statues, paintings, and other religious articles have long been used as a means of fostering and expressing our religious devotion to God and the saints. Icons, or painted images of Christ and the saints, are especially popular among Eastern Christians as an aid to Christian piety and devotion.

The use of any religious article is therefore intended as a means of reminding us of God and of stirring up in us a ready willingness and desire to serve God and our neighbor. With this understanding we reject any use of religious articles as if they were mere charms or had some magic power to bring us good luck or better health. Such is not the Christian attitude.

Origin of the Medal of Saint Benedict

For the early Christians, the cross was a favorite symbol and badge of their faith in Christ. From the writings of St. Gregory the Great (540-604), we know that St. Benedict had a deep faith in the Cross and worked miracles with the sign of the cross. This faith in, and special devotion to, the Cross was passed on to succeeding generations of Benedictines.

Devotion to the Cross of Christ also gave rise to the striking of medals that bore the image of St. Benedict holding a cross aloft in his right hand and his
Rule for Monasteries in the other hand. Thus, the Cross has always been closely associated with the Medal of St. Benedict, which is often referred to as the Medal-Cross of St. Benedict.

In the course of time, other additions were made, such as the Latin petition on the margin of the medal, asking that by St. Benedict's presence we may be strengthened in the hour of death, as will be explained later.

We do not know just when the first medal of St. Benedict was struck. At some point in history a series of capital letters was placed around the large figure of the cross on the reverse side of the medal. For a long time the meaning of these letters was unknown, but in 1647 a manuscript dating back to 1415 was found at the Abbey of Metten in Bavaria, giving an explanation of the letters. They are the initial letters of a Latin prayer of exorcism against Satan, as will be explained below.

The Jubilee Medal of Montecassino

The above features were finally incorporated in a newly designed medal struck in 1880 under the supervision of the monks of Montecassino, Italy, to mark the 1400th anniversary of the birth of St. Benedict. The design of this medal was produced at St. Martin's
Archabbey, Beuron, Germany, at the request of the prior of Montecassino, Very Rev. Boniface Krug OSB (1838-1909). Prior Boniface was a native of Baltimore and originally a monk of St. Vincent Archabbey, Latrobe, Pennsylvania, until he was chosen to become prior and latter archabbot of Montecassino.

Since that time, the Jubilee Medal of 1880 has proven to be more popular throughout the Christian world than any other medal ever struck to honor St. Benedict.

Description of the Jubilee Medal

Because the
Jubilee Medal of 1880 has all the important features ever associated with the Medal of St. Benedict, the following description of this medal can serve to make clear the nature and intent of any medal of St.
Benedict, no matter what shape or design it may legitimately have.

On the face of the
medal is the image of Saint Benedict. In his right hand
he holds the
cross, the Christian's symbol of salvation. The cross reminds us of the zealous work of evangelizing and civilizing England and Europe carried out mainly by the Benedictine monks and nuns, especially for the sixth to the ninth/tenth centuries.

Rule and Raven

In St. Benedict's left hand is his Rule
for Monasteries that could well be summed up in the words of the
Prolog exhorting us to "walk in God's ways, with the Gospel as our guide."

On a pedestal
to the right of St. Benedict is the poisoned cup, shattered when he made the sign of the cross over it.
On a pedestal to the left is a raven about to carry away a loaf of poisoned bread that a
jealous enemy had sent to St. Benedict.

C. S. P. B.

Above the cup and the raven are the Latin
words: Crux s. patris Benedicti (The Cross of our holy father
Benedict). On the margin of the medal, encircling the figure of Benedict,
are the Latin words: Eius in obitu nostro praesentia muniamur!
(May we be strengthened by his presence in the hour of our death!). Benedictines have always regarded St. Benedict as a special patron of a happy death. He himself died in the chapel at Montecassino
while standing with his arms raised up to heaven, supported by the brothers of the monastery, shortly after St. Benedict
had received Holy Communion.

Monte Cassino

Below Benedict we read: ex SM Casino MDCCCLXXX
(from holy Monte Cassino, 1880). This is the medal struck to commemorate the
1400th anniversary of the birth of Saint Benedict.

Crux mihi lux

On the back of the medal, the cross is dominant. On the arms of the cross are the initial letters of a rhythmic Latin prayer:
Crux sacra sit mihi lux! Nunquam draco sit mihi dux!
(May the holy cross be my light! May the dragon never be my guide!).

In the angles of the cross, the letters C S P B stand for Crux Sancti Patris Benedicti (The cross of our holy father Benedict).

Peace

Above the cross is the word pax (peace), that has been a Benedictine motto for
centuries. Around the margin of the back of the medal, the letters
V R S N S M V - S M Q L I V B are the
initial letters, as mentioned above, of a Latin prayer of exorcism against Satan:
Vade retro Satana! Nunquam suade mihi vana! Sunt mala quae libas. Ipse venena
bibas!
(Begone Satan! Never tempt me with your vanities! What you offer me is evil. Drink the poison yourself!)

Use of the Medal

There is no special way prescribed for carrying or wearing the Medal of St. Benedict. It can be worn on a chain around the neck, attached to one's rosary, kept in one's pocket or purse, or placed in one's car or home. The medal is often put into the foundations of houses and building, on the walls of barns and sheds, or in one's place of business.

The purpose of using the medal in any of the above ways is to call down God's blessing and protection upon us, wherever we are, and upon our homes and possessions, especially through the intercession of St. Benedict. By the conscious and devout use of the medal, it becomes, as it were, a constant silent prayer and reminder to us of our dignity as followers of Christ.

The medal is a prayer of exorcism against Satan, a prayer for strength in time of
temptation, a prayer for peace among ourselves and among the nations of the world, a prayer that the Cross of Christ be our light and guide, a prayer of firm rejection of all that is evil, a
prayer of petition that we may with Christian courage "walk in God's ways, with the
Gospel as our guide," as St. Benedict urges us.

A profitable spiritual experience can be ours if we but take the time to study the array of
inscriptions and representations found on the two sides of the medal. The lessons found there can be pondered over and over to bring true peace of mind and
heart into our lives as we struggle to overcome the weaknesses of our human nature and realize that our human condition is not perfect, but that with the help of God and the intercession of the saints our condition can become better.

The Medal of St. Benedict can serve as a constant reminder of the need for us to take up our cross daily and "follow the true King, Christ our Lord," and thus learn "to share in his heavenly
kingdom," as St. Benedict urges us in the Prolog of his Rule.

Two Special Uses of the Medal

By a rescript of the Sacred Congregation of Religious (4 May 1965) lay Oblates of St. Benedict are permitted to wear the Medal of St. Benedict instead of the small black cloth scapular formerly worn.

By a decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites (6 March 1959), the Blessing
of St. Maur over the sick is permitted to be given with a Medal of St. Benedict instead of with a relic of the True Cross, since the latter is difficult to obtain.

Approved Blessing
of the Medal of St. Benedict

Medals of Saint Benedict are sacramentals that may be blessed legitimately by any priest
or deacon -- not necessarily a Benedictine (Instr., 26 Sept. 1964;
Can. 1168). The following English form may be used.

V. Our help is in the name of the Lord.
R. Who made heaven and earth.

In the name of God the Father+ almighty, who made
heaven and earth, the seas and all that is in them, I exorcise these
medals against the power and attacks of the evil one. May all who use
these medals devoutly be blessed with health of soul and body. In the
name of the Father + almighty, of the Son
+ Jesus Christ our Lord, and of the
Holy + Spirit the Paraclete, and in the love
of the same Lord Jesus Christ
who will come on the last day to judge the living and the dead, and the
world by fire.
Amen.

Let us pray. Almighty God, the boundless source of all good
things, we humbly ask that, through the intercession of Saint Benedict, you pour out your blessings
+ upon these medals. May those who use them
devoutly and earnestly strive to perform good works be blessed by you with
health of soul and body, the grace of a holy life, and remission of the
temporal punishment due to sin.

May they also with the help of your
merciful love, resist the temptation of the evil one and strive to
exercise true charity and justice toward all, so that one day they may
appear sinless and holy in your sight. This we ask though Christ our
Lord. Amen.

Johnson SRL, Barazante, Italy, offers high quality wholesale lots. Johnson,
established in 1836, is the oldest Italian medal factory, and the
company cast
the first Jubilee medal in 1880.

JMJ Totally Catholic and Catholic Supply are
retail distributors that offer online a wide selection of modern spin-offs
such as "Benedictine" rosaries and crucifixes that feature the
Medal of Saint Benedict as a component.

Blessing of Saint Maur

Blessing of Saint Maurus over the Sick
with the Medal of Saint Benedict invokes the power of the Cross and the healing
of the Holy Spirit.